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Thomas Edison's
Research Laboratory

 

Nearly everyone knows that Thomas Edison invented the light bulb, but what most people don’t know is that one of his greatest inventions was figuring out a better way to invent things—the research laboratory. 

Thomas Alva Edison was born on February 11, 1847 in Milan, Ohio. It was soon apparent to everyone that "Al" as he was called was very bright because he was always taking things apart to see how they worked. He was always the industrious type, and by the age of 12 he was selling newspapers and snacks on a train from Port Huron to Detroit. 


At 15, he began publishing the first newspaper ever to be published aboard a moving train. He then learned telegraphy and traveled the country as a telegraph operator. It was during this time that he created his first important invention, a telegraphic repeater that automatically transmitted messages over a second line. 

In 1868, he invented an electrical vote counter and got his first patent for it. In 1869, he designed an improved stock ticker and then set up a company to manufacture it. In 1874, he invented the quadruplex telegraph, capable of sending up to four messages simultaneously. By 1877, he had earned $40,000 from his inventions and decided it was time to expand and refine his invention process.

Edison was 30 years old when he built his first laboratory in Menlo Park New Jersey, so that he could bring together the men and materials that he needed to tackle more difficult challenges. Edison called his assistants "Muckers" and they referred to him as the "Chief Mucker". They often had several projects going at once, and it wasn’t long before they started churning out one invention after another, including such revolutionary devices as the phonograph and the electric light. Edison and his Muckers also invented all of the power generating systems and delivery systems that were required so that power would be available to businesses and homes and insure the commercial success of his electric light. During this time he filed over 400 patents and became known around the world as "The Wizard of Menlo Park."

Edison's Menlo Park laboratory

The lab was so successful because of Edison’s inventive genius, his dogged determination, and his ability to inspire his assistants’ loyalty and dedication by working so hard along side them and relaxing with them. The lab even had a pipe organ, and often after a long day of work he would play the pipe organ while he and his assistants would have a sing along. The people who worked with him during those years would often say that those were the happiest days of their lives.

Edison’s goal was always to create a small invention every ten days and a big invention every six months. His most important consideration when deciding whether to begin a project was to determine what would be the ultimate practical commercial application. In other words, what was going to be the product and how he could make money from it. Edison once said, "I always invented to obtain money to go on inventing" so for him the money wasn’t really the goal, just a means to insure that he could continue his work.

Eventually the lab at Menlo Park was just too small to contain all of the work that he wanted done, so Edison began building a new laboratory complex in West Orange New Jersey. He hired a much larger and diverse staff, consisting initially of more than 200 machinists, scientists, craftsmen, and laborers. One associate of Edison’s recalled that when a new employee asked him if there were any rules, Edison replied "There ain’t no rules around here. We’re trying to accomplish something." The staff was divided by Edison into as many as 10 to 20 small teams, each working simultaneously for as long as necessary to turn an idea from a prototype to a working model that could be manufactured.

Edison's "Muckers"

Edison himself would move from team to team advising and motivating them. When an invention was perfected, he quickly patented the device. With such extensive facilities and his large staff, Edison was able to turn out new products on timetable and a scale that dwarfed his earlier accomplishments at Menlo Park. At the West Orange complex they invented an alkaline storage battery, the movie camera, the electric pen, the first talking pictures, the mimeograph, the fluoroscope and made major improvements to the phonograph.

Rather than sell the patent rights or royalties to his inventions, Edison knew that the real money was to be made from selling products. so he built large factories next to his laboratory complex to mass-produce them. Not only did he manufacture movie cameras and projectors, but he even built a movie studio for making motion pictures. The building had a roof that opened up to let the sun in and the entire structure was on a turntable that could be rotated to keep the sun pointed at the stage throughout the day.

By creating a large laboratory and factory complex that eventually employed nearly 5,000 people, Edison could undertake more projects with greater resources than had ever been possible before. His research and development laboratories were the first of their kind anywhere and revolutionized the process of technological research. His vision led to a new era in which innovation proceeded at an unprecedented rate, bringing with it great improvements in the quality of life of every individual and many changes to society.

In 1892, the Edison General Electric Company merged with another small research and development company to form General Electric. Since then, GE has grown into a diversified technology, manufacturing and services corporation with 250 manufacturing plants in 26 different nations. GE employs 313,000 people worldwide and in 2001 had revenues in excess of 125 billion dollars.

Edison's Congressional Gold Medal

Edison worked at his West Orange laboratory complex for 44 years. He died in 1931 at the age of 84, and millions of people from around the world mourned his passing. Among the many awards he received during his lifetime was the Congressional Gold Medal, "for development and application of inventions that have revolutionized civilization in the last century." Thomas Edison was often called a genius, but he was fond of saying, "Genius is 1% inspiration and 99% perspiration.
 

 

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